Question for studying and campus life

<p>I just got accepted by LSA and rejected by Ross pre-admission. I really want to major in finance and following are my questions:
1. If I apply to the program again in Freshman year, will it be easier to get in?
2. if I am rejected again, what major should I choose? Now my major shows "LSA Undeclared" on WA. Does everyone have it? If I choose math or actuarial science, will they be related to finance?
3. How am I supposed to choose the housing? Should I make the choice on where my classes are? When should I start choosing it?
4. I am an international students and I can not get my license until I am 18 years old, which will be my sophomore year. Is it necessary for me to bring a bike or I can totally rely on the public transportation?</p>

<p>Ross pre-admit acceptance rate is about 15%, and regular admission acceptance is around 40-45% I believe, so yes, it is much easier.</p>

<p>Yes, every freshman in LSA starts out undeclared. You can declare your major(s)/minor(s) at any time after your first semester begins.</p>

<p>If you are in LSA, choose housing on central campus, it is where your classes will be.</p>

<p>You don’t need a bike, and unless you live on north campus, you probably won’t need to use public transportation either. Everything on central campus is within walking distance of everything else.</p>

<p>@entenduintransit Thanks! That helps a lot! By the way do you know when the international students need to send the bank statements and financial certification for the I-20 form?</p>

<p>I have no idea for any international students questions (besides you picked an incredible school in terms of getting a great dose of American culture). </p>

<p>1) It is easier to get into Ross your freshman year but you need to really focus on the application as it’s pretty competitive still (35-40% acceptance). Look heavily into the BBA website as well as the threads here on CC to get more information.</p>

<p>2) That is completely up to you. Take classes here that interest you and see what you like best. Financial math is always an option as well as economics, but any program at Michigan is likely to be awesome.</p>

<p>3) Like entenduit said choose central campus as your preferred housing. If you want to guarantee housing on central campus however (definitely worth it in my opinion) I would look into the learning communities (RC and Alice Lloyd Scholars) and see if any of those interest you. They are housed in dorms on central campus.</p>

<p>4) Very few freshmen have cars and a pretty small percentage of students as a whole have cars, so that is nothing to worry about. Public transportation combined with taxi service will get you anywhere that you want, including to the airport and to the mall, which are the only far away places you’d ever need to get to, everything else is walking distance including the entire city.</p>